Learn how Neon compares to Aurora Serverless v2 - TL;DR: faster cold starts, responsive autoscaling, 80% lower costs

PostgreSQL LENGTH() Function

Summary: in this tutorial, you will learn how to use the PostgreSQL LENGTH() functions to get the number of characters of a string.

Introduction to the PostgreSQL LENGTH() function

The PostgreSQL LENGTH() function returns the number of characters in a string.

Here’s the basic syntax for the LENGTH() function:

LENGTH(string);

The LENGTH() function accepts a string as a parameter. It can be any of the following data types:

  • character or char
  • character varying or varchar
  • text

The LENGTH() function returns an integer that represents the number of characters in the string. It returns NULL if the string is null.

PostgreSQL provides the CHAR_LENGTH() and CHARACTER_LENGTH() functions that provide the same functionality as the LENGTH() function.

PostgreSQL LENGTH() function examples

Let’s explore some examples of using the LENGTH() function.

1) Basic PostgreSQL LENGTH() function examples

The following example uses the LENGTH() function to get the length of a string:

SELECT
  LENGTH ('PostgreSQL Tutorial');

Output:

length
--------
     19
(1 row)

If you pass NULL to the LENGTH() function, it returns NULL.

SELECT
  LENGTH (NULL);

Output:

length
--------
   null
(1 row)

2) Using the PostgreSQL LENGTH() function with table data example

We’ll use the customer table from the sample database:

customer tableThe following example uses the LENGTH() function to retrieve the first names and the number of characters of first names from the customer table:

SELECT
  first_name,
  LENGTH (first_name) len
FROM
  customer
ORDER BY
  len;

Output:

first_name  | len
-------------+-----
 Jo          |   2
 Sam         |   3
 Roy         |   3
 Eva         |   3
 Don         |   3
 Dan         |   3
...

Summary

  • Use the PostgreSQL LENGTH() function to get the number of characters of a string.

Last updated on

Was this page helpful?